Retinal projection near-eye displays with Huygens’ metasurfaces

Most of current commercial near-eye 3D displays use traditional stereoscopic approach to generate the 3D information. A well-known issue for this type of technology is the vergence and accommodation conflict, which leads to visual confusion and fatigue for the viewer. To address this problem, a proo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Song, Weitao, Liang, Xinan, Li, Shiqiang, Moitra, Parikshit, Xu, Xuewu, Lassalle, Emmanuel, Zheng, Yuanjin, Wang, Yongtian, Paniagua-Domínguez, Ramón, Kuznetsov, Arseniy I.
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179124
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Most of current commercial near-eye 3D displays use traditional stereoscopic approach to generate the 3D information. A well-known issue for this type of technology is the vergence and accommodation conflict, which leads to visual confusion and fatigue for the viewer. To address this problem, a proof-of-concept solution based on retinal projection technology has been developed to provide accommodation-free virtual images by using a small aperture (360 µm × 360 µm) transparent Huygens’ metasurface hologram as the display device. The virtual image is generated using a visible laser illuminating a metasurface hologram, which is then directly projected onto the retina using an optical see-through eyepiece. Using this concept, this work experimentally demonstrates a compact and wearable near-eye display of light weight (≈50 g, including spectacle frames, light source, and battery) creating accommodation-free images (clear ranging from 0.5 to 2 m), overlaid with the real world and directly viewed by naked eye. To do so, a new design method is introduced for retinal projection near-eye displays that, inherently, is able to solve the vergence-accommodation conflict using a small aperture Huygens’ metasurface hologram.